Kyle D,
Tooling fixtures? I have designed tooling fixtures to be "rapid" prototyped.
Back in 1980, I took CNC machining programming in college. I still have the punched tape. We were told that CNC machining was economical in production runs of 10 to 100. About ten years later, all of our machine shops bought CNC machines, and used them on one[‑]off parts. I am not sure how CNC saves money, but I can make some intelligent guesses...
[ul]
[li]Instead of trashing expensive, long[‑]lead billets, you make virtual errors, not real ones.[/li]
[li]Once I understood my vendors were CNC machining, my machined parts got way more complicated. I took advantage of the process.[/li]
[li]Perhaps I have ten highly trained, expensive machinists, each of whom requires at least one machining station. Now, most of my machinists sit in front of a cheap computer, and I can get work done with three or four stations.[/li]
[li]Sheet metal CNC makes it trivial on a one[‑]off project to punch out multiple pieces.
If you goof up the subsequent bending and/or welding, you grab the next piece and try again.
Back in the day, the shop might refuse to quote on a difficult job because of the risk of screw[‑]ups.[/li]
[/ul]
I don't know how rapid prototyping will work out.
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JHG